Stable Block And Attached Walling Approximately 18 Metres North West Of Newton House is a Grade II listed building in the North York Moors National Park local planning authority area, England. First listed on 6 October 1969. A C19 Stable block, carriage house.
Stable Block And Attached Walling Approximately 18 Metres North West Of Newton House
- WRENN ID
- tired-portal-harvest
- Grade
- II
- Local Planning Authority
- North York Moors National Park
- Country
- England
- Date first listed
- 6 October 1969
- Type
- Stable block, carriage house
- Source
- Historic England listing
Description
The stable block and attached walling, located approximately 18 metres north-west of Newton House, is an early 19th-century structure with 20th-century alterations. It serves as a coachman's house, stables, carriage house, and has an attached yard wall. The building is constructed from herringbone-tooled sandstone and features slate roofs. The yard front consists of a two-storey-and-attic central bay flanked by two-storey bays, with a one-storey lean-to carriage house on the left.
In the centre, there is a segmental archway with a keyblock and imposts, which has been blocked with a 20th-century glazed screen. The flanking bays have 20th-century doors set in original openings, topped with herringbone-tooled lintels. All first-floor windows are 16-pane sashes with painted stone sills and flat arches made of tooled voussoirs. Above the central window, there is a rectangular sundial with a partly defaced Latin inscription, and a radial glazed oculus in the pedimented attic.
The carriage house features a segmental arch of tooled voussoirs, which is closed by double board doors on strap hinges and has a pent roof. The gables of the double-span main roof are coped and finished with scrolled volutes, and there are end stacks on both ranges of the roof.
The rear of the building mirrors the yard front, with a projecting gable end of the carriage house on the right. The ground floor of the central bay has a right-of-centre doorway with a 20th-century door and a blocked window opening to the left. The attic roundel is blind. The yard wall, which attaches to the rear gable end of the carriage house, is stepped and raked in places, with flat coping. It is interrupted opposite the house door by gate piers topped with "Gothick" caps and continues around the end of the stable block, curving at the front to form a small yard. A mounting block is positioned against the curved wall.
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